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Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | No, he must have been thinking of letters and syllables. | No, he must have been thinking of letters and syllables. | -350 | 1,997 | 56 | no, he must have been thinking of letters and syllables. | ['no', 'he', 'must', 'have', 'been', 'thinking', 'of', 'letters', 'and', 'syllables'] | no , -PRON- must have be think of letter and syllable . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | Let's take and examine them then. | Let's take and examine them then. | -350 | 1,997 | 33 | let's take and examine them then. | ['let', 'take', 'and', 'examine', 'them', 'then'] | let -PRON- take and examine -PRON- then . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | Or rather let us examine ourselves, and ask ourselves whether we really learned our letters in this way or not. | Or rather let us examine ourselves, and ask ourselves whether we really learned our letters in this way or not. | -350 | 1,997 | 111 | or rather let us examine ourselves, and ask ourselves whether we really learned our letters in this way or not. | ['or', 'rather', 'let', 'us', 'examine', 'ourselves', 'and', 'ask', 'ourselves', 'whether', 'we', 'really', 'learned', 'our', 'letters', 'in', 'this', 'way', 'or', 'not'] | or rather let -PRON- examine -PRON- , and ask -PRON- whether -PRON- really learn -PRON- letter in this way or not . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | Now, to begin with, one can give an account of the syllables but | Now, to begin with, one can give an account of the syllables but | -350 | 1,997 | 64 | now, to begin with, one can give an account of the syllables but | ['now', 'to', 'begin', 'with', 'one', 'can', 'give', 'an', 'account', 'of', 'the', 'syllables', 'but'] | now , to begin with , one can give an account of the syllable but |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | not of the letters is that it? | not of the letters is that it? | -350 | 1,997 | 30 | not of the letters is that it? | ['not', 'of', 'the', 'letters', 'is', 'that', 'it'] | not of the letter be that -PRON- ? |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | It most certainly looks like that to me. | It most certainly looks like that to me. | -350 | 1,997 | 40 | it most certainly looks like that to me. | ['it', 'most', 'certainly', 'looks', 'like', 'that', 'to', 'me'] | -PRON- most certainly look like that to -PRON- . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | At any rate, supposing you were asked about the first syllable of 'Socrates': 'Tell me, Theaetetus, what is ?' | At any rate, supposing you were asked about the first syllable of 'Socrates': 'Tell me, Theaetetus, what is ?' | -350 | 1,997 | 110 | at any rate, supposing you were asked about the first syllable of 'socrates': 'tell me, theaetetus, what is ?' | ['at', 'any', 'rate', 'supposing', 'you', 'were', 'asked', 'about', 'the', 'first', 'syllable', 'of', 'socrates', 'tell', 'me', 'theaetetus', 'what', 'is'] | at any rate , suppose -PRON- be ask about the first syllable of ' Socrates ' : ' tell -PRON- , Theaetetus , what be ? ' |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | What would you answer to that? | What would you answer to that? | -350 | 1,997 | 30 | what would you answer to that? | ['what', 'would', 'you', 'answer', 'to', 'that'] | what would -PRON- answer to that ? |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | And there you have an account of the syllable?. | And there you have an account of the syllable?. | -350 | 1,997 | 47 | and there you have an account of the syllable?. | ['and', 'there', 'you', 'have', 'an', 'account', 'of', 'the', 'syllable'] | and there -PRON- have an account of the syllable ? . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | translates stoicheia, which can also mean 'elements' more generally (and is so translated sometimes below). ' | translates stoicheia, which can also mean 'elements' more generally (and is so translated sometimes below). ' | -350 | 1,997 | 109 | translates stoicheia, which can also mean 'elements' more generally (and is so translated sometimes below). ' | ['translates', 'stoicheia', 'which', 'can', 'also', 'mean', 'elements', 'more', 'generally', 'and', 'is', 'so', 'translated', 'sometimes', 'below'] | translate stoicheia , which can also mean ' element ' more generally ( and be so translate sometimes below ) . ' |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | Syllables': in Greek sullabai, also translated below as 'complexes.' | Syllables': in Greek sullabai, also translated below as 'complexes.' | -350 | 1,997 | 68 | syllables': in greek sullabai, also translated below as 'complexes.' | ['syllables', 'in', 'greek', 'sullabai', 'also', 'translated', 'below', 'as', 'complexes'] | syllable ' : in greek sullabai , also translate below as ' complex . ' |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | Come along then, and let us have the account of in the same way. | Come along then, and let us have the account of in the same way. | -350 | 1,997 | 64 | come along then, and let us have the account of in the same way. | ['come', 'along', 'then', 'and', 'let', 'us', 'have', 'the', 'account', 'of', 'in', 'the', 'same', 'way'] | come along then , and let -PRON- have the account of in the same way . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | How can anyone give the letters of a letter? | How can anyone give the letters of a letter? | -350 | 1,997 | 44 | how can anyone give the letters of a letter? | ['how', 'can', 'anyone', 'give', 'the', 'letters', 'of', 'letter'] | how can anyone give the letter of a letter ? |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | is just one of the voiceless letters, Socrates, a mere sound like a hissing of the tongue. | is just one of the voiceless letters, Socrates, a mere sound like a hissing of the tongue. | -350 | 1,997 | 90 | is just one of the voiceless letters, socrates, a mere sound like a hissing of the tongue. | ['is', 'just', 'one', 'of', 'the', 'voiceless', 'letters', 'socrates', 'mere', 'sound', 'like', 'hissing', 'of', 'the', 'tongue'] | be just one of the voiceless letter , Socrates , a mere sound like a hissing of the tongue . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | again has neither voice nor sound, and that's true of most letters. | again has neither voice nor sound, and that's true of most letters. | -350 | 1,997 | 67 | again has neither voice nor sound, and that's true of most letters. | ['again', 'has', 'neither', 'voice', 'nor', 'sound', 'and', 'that', 'true', 'of', 'most', 'letters'] | again have neither voice nor sound , and that be true of most letter . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | So the statement that they themselves are unaccountable holds perfectly good. | So the statement that they themselves are unaccountable holds perfectly good. | -350 | 1,997 | 77 | so the statement that they themselves are unaccountable holds perfectly good. | ['so', 'the', 'statement', 'that', 'they', 'themselves', 'are', 'unaccountable', 'holds', 'perfectly', 'good'] | so the statement that -PRON- -PRON- be unaccountable hold perfectly good . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | Even the seven clearest have only voice; no sort of account whatever can be given of them. | Even the seven clearest have only voice; no sort of account whatever can be given of them. | -350 | 1,997 | 90 | even the seven clearest have only voice; no sort of account whatever can be given of them. | ['even', 'the', 'seven', 'clearest', 'have', 'only', 'voice', 'no', 'sort', 'of', 'account', 'whatever', 'can', 'be', 'given', 'of', 'them'] | even the seven clear have only voice ; no sort of account whatever can be give of -PRON- . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | So here, my friend, we have established a point about knowledge. | So here, my friend, we have established a point about knowledge. | -350 | 1,997 | 64 | so here, my friend, we have established a point about knowledge. | ['so', 'here', 'my', 'friend', 'we', 'have', 'established', 'point', 'about', 'knowledge'] | so here , -PRON- friend , -PRON- have establish a point about knowledge . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | We do appear to have done so. | We do appear to have done so. | -350 | 1,997 | 29 | we do appear to have done so. | ['we', 'do', 'appear', 'to', 'have', 'done', 'so'] | -PRON- do appear to have do so . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | Well then: we have shown that the syllable is knowable but not the letter is that all right? | Well then: we have shown that the syllable is knowable but not the letter is that all right? | -350 | 1,997 | 92 | well then: we have shown that the syllable is knowable but not the letter is that all right? | ['well', 'then', 'we', 'have', 'shown', 'that', 'the', 'syllable', 'is', 'knowable', 'but', 'not', 'the', 'letter', 'is', 'that', 'all', 'right'] | well then : -PRON- have show that the syllable be knowable but not the letter be that all right ? |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | It seems the natural conclusion, anyway. | It seems the natural conclusion, anyway. | -350 | 1,997 | 40 | it seems the natural conclusion, anyway. | ['it', 'seems', 'the', 'natural', 'conclusion', 'anyway'] | -PRON- seem the natural conclusion , anyway . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | Look here, what do we mean by 'the syllable'? | Look here, what do we mean by 'the syllable'? | -350 | 1,997 | 45 | look here, what do we mean by 'the syllable'? | ['look', 'here', 'what', 'do', 'we', 'mean', 'by', 'the', 'syllable'] | look here , what do -PRON- mean by ' the syllable ' ? |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | The two letters (or if there are more, all the letters)? | The two letters (or if there are more, all the letters)? | -350 | 1,997 | 56 | the two letters (or if there are more, all the letters)? | ['the', 'two', 'letters', 'or', 'if', 'there', 'are', 'more', 'all', 'the', 'letters'] | the two letter ( or if there be more , all the letter ) ? |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | Or do we mean some single form produced by their combination? | Or do we mean some single form produced by their combination? | -350 | 1,997 | 61 | or do we mean some single form produced by their combination? | ['or', 'do', 'we', 'mean', 'some', 'single', 'form', 'produced', 'by', 'their', 'combination'] | or do -PRON- mean some single form produce by -PRON- combination ? |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | I think we mean all the letters. | I think we mean all the letters. | -350 | 1,997 | 32 | i think we mean all the letters. | ['think', 'we', 'mean', 'all', 'the', 'letters'] | -PRON- think -PRON- mean all the letter . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | Then take the case of the two letters, and O; these two are the first syllable of my name. | Then take the case of the two letters, and O; these two are the first syllable of my name. | -350 | 1,997 | 90 | then take the case of the two letters, and o; these two are the first syllable of my name. | ['then', 'take', 'the', 'case', 'of', 'the', 'two', 'letters', 'and', 'these', 'two', 'are', 'the', 'first', 'syllable', 'of', 'my', 'name'] | then take the case of the two letter , and o ; these two be the first syllable of -PRON- name . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | If a man knows the syllable, he must know both the letters? | If a man knows the syllable, he must know both the letters? | -350 | 1,997 | 59 | if a man knows the syllable, he must know both the letters? | ['if', 'man', 'knows', 'the', 'syllable', 'he', 'must', 'know', 'both', 'the', 'letters'] | if a man know the syllable , -PRON- must know both the letter ? |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | But can it be that he is ignorant of each one, and knows the two of them without knowing either? | But can it be that he is ignorant of each one, and knows the two of them without knowing either? | -350 | 1,997 | 96 | but can it be that he is ignorant of each one, and knows the two of them without knowing either? | ['but', 'can', 'it', 'be', 'that', 'he', 'is', 'ignorant', 'of', 'each', 'one', 'and', 'knows', 'the', 'two', 'of', 'them', 'without', 'knowing', 'either'] | but can -PRON- be that -PRON- be ignorant of each one , and know the two of -PRON- without know either ? |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | That would be a strange and unaccountable thing, Socrates. | That would be a strange and unaccountable thing, Socrates. | -350 | 1,997 | 58 | that would be a strange and unaccountable thing, socrates. | ['that', 'would', 'be', 'strange', 'and', 'unaccountable', 'thing', 'socrates'] | that would be a strange and unaccountable thing , Socrates . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | And yet, supposing it is necessary to know each in order to know both, then it is absolutely necessary that anyone who is ever to know a syllable must first get to know the letters. | And yet, supposing it is necessary to know each in order to know both, then it is absolutely necessary that anyone who is ever to know a syllable must first get to know the letters. | -350 | 1,997 | 181 | and yet, supposing it is necessary to know each in order to know both, then it is absolutely necessary that anyone who is ever to know a syllable must first get to know the letters. | ['and', 'yet', 'supposing', 'it', 'is', 'necessary', 'to', 'know', 'each', 'in', 'order', 'to', 'know', 'both', 'then', 'it', 'is', 'absolutely', 'necessary', 'that', 'anyone', 'who', 'is', 'ever', 'to', 'know', 'syllable', 'must', 'first', 'get', 'to', 'know', 'the', 'letters'] | and yet , suppose -PRON- be necessary to know each in order to know both , then -PRON- be absolutely necessary that anyone who be ever to know a syllable must first get to know the letter . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | And in admitting this, we shall find that our beautiful theory has taken to its heels and got clean away from us. | And in admitting this, we shall find that our beautiful theory has taken to its heels and got clean away from us. | -350 | 1,997 | 113 | and in admitting this, we shall find that our beautiful theory has taken to its heels and got clean away from us. | ['and', 'in', 'admitting', 'this', 'we', 'shall', 'find', 'that', 'our', 'beautiful', 'theory', 'has', 'taken', 'to', 'its', 'heels', 'and', 'got', 'clean', 'away', 'from', 'us'] | and in admit this , -PRON- shall find that -PRON- beautiful theory have take to -PRON- heel and get clean away from -PRON- . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | And very suddenly too. | And very suddenly too. | -350 | 1,997 | 22 | and very suddenly too. | ['and', 'very', 'suddenly', 'too'] | and very suddenly too . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | Yes; we are not keeping a proper watch on it. | Yes; we are not keeping a proper watch on it. | -350 | 1,997 | 45 | yes; we are not keeping a proper watch on it. | ['yes', 'we', 'are', 'not', 'keeping', 'proper', 'watch', 'on', 'it'] | yes ; -PRON- be not keep a proper watch on -PRON- . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | Perhaps we ought not to have supposed the syllable to be the letters; perhaps we ought to have made it some single form produced out of them, having its own single nature something different from the letters. | Perhaps we ought not to have supposed the syllable to be the letters; perhaps we ought to have made it some single form produced out of them, having its own single nature something different from the letters. | -350 | 1,997 | 208 | perhaps we ought not to have supposed the syllable to be the letters; perhaps we ought to have made it some single form produced out of them, having its own single nature something different from the letters. | ['perhaps', 'we', 'ought', 'not', 'to', 'have', 'supposed', 'the', 'syllable', 'to', 'be', 'the', 'letters', 'perhaps', 'we', 'ought', 'to', 'have', 'made', 'it', 'some', 'single', 'form', 'produced', 'out', 'of', 'them', 'having', 'its', 'own', 'single', 'nature', 'something', 'different', 'from', 'the', 'letters'] | perhaps -PRON- ought not to have suppose the syllable to be the letter ; perhaps -PRON- ought to have make -PRON- some single form produce out of -PRON- , have -PRON- own single nature something different from the letter . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | Yes, certainly; that might be more like it. | Yes, certainly; that might be more like it. | -350 | 1,997 | 43 | yes, certainly; that might be more like it. | ['yes', 'certainly', 'that', 'might', 'be', 'more', 'like', 'it'] | yes , certainly ; that may be more like -PRON- . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | We must look into the matter; we have no right to betray a great and imposing theory in this faint hearted manner. | We must look into the matter; we have no right to betray a great and imposing theory in this faint hearted manner. | -350 | 1,997 | 114 | we must look into the matter; we have no right to betray a great and imposing theory in this faint hearted manner. | ['we', 'must', 'look', 'into', 'the', 'matter', 'we', 'have', 'no', 'right', 'to', 'betray', 'great', 'and', 'imposing', 'theory', 'in', 'this', 'faint', 'hearted', 'manner'] | -PRON- must look into the matter ; -PRON- have no right to betray a great and impose theory in this faint hearted manner . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | I.e., the seven vowels of ancient Greek, as contrasted with two classes of consonant: mutes like, which cannot be pronounced without a vowel, and semivowels like, which can. | I.e., the seven vowels of ancient Greek, as contrasted with two classes of consonant: mutes like, which cannot be pronounced without a vowel, and semivowels like, which can. | -350 | 1,997 | 173 | i.e., the seven vowels of ancient greek, as contrasted with two classes of consonant: mutes like, which cannot be pronounced without a vowel, and semivowels like, which can. | ['the', 'seven', 'vowels', 'of', 'ancient', 'greek', 'as', 'contrasted', 'with', 'two', 'classes', 'of', 'consonant', 'mutes', 'like', 'which', 'cannot', 'be', 'pronounced', 'without', 'vowel', 'and', 'semivowels', 'like', 'which', 'can'] | i.e. , the seven vowel of ancient Greek , as contrast with two class of consonant : mute like , which can not be pronounce without a vowel , and semivowel like , which can . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | Theaetetus Then let it be as we are now suggesting. | Theaetetus Then let it be as we are now suggesting. | -350 | 1,997 | 51 | theaetetus then let it be as we are now suggesting. | ['theaetetus', 'then', 'let', 'it', 'be', 'as', 'we', 'are', 'now', 'suggesting'] | Theaetetus then let -PRON- be as -PRON- be now suggest . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | Let the complex be a single form resulting from the combination of the several elements when they fit together; and let this hold both of language and of things in general. | Let the complex be a single form resulting from the combination of the several elements when they fit together; and let this hold both of language and of things in general. | -350 | 1,997 | 172 | let the complex be a single form resulting from the combination of the several elements when they fit together; and let this hold both of language and of things in general. | ['let', 'the', 'complex', 'be', 'single', 'form', 'resulting', 'from', 'the', 'combination', 'of', 'the', 'several', 'elements', 'when', 'they', 'fit', 'together', 'and', 'let', 'this', 'hold', 'both', 'of', 'language', 'and', 'of', 'things', 'in', 'general'] | let the complex be a single form result from the combination of the several element when -PRON- fit together ; and let this hold both of language and of thing in general . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | Then it must have no parts. | Then it must have no parts. | -350 | 1,997 | 27 | then it must have no parts. | ['then', 'it', 'must', 'have', 'no', 'parts'] | then -PRON- must have no part . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | Because when a thing has parts, the whole is necessarily all the parts. | Because when a thing has parts, the whole is necessarily all the parts. | -350 | 1,997 | 71 | because when a thing has parts, the whole is necessarily all the parts. | ['because', 'when', 'thing', 'has', 'parts', 'the', 'whole', 'is', 'necessarily', 'all', 'the', 'parts'] | because when a thing have part , the whole be necessarily all the part . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | Or do you mean by 'the whole' also a single form arising out of the parts, yet different from all the parts? | Or do you mean by 'the whole' also a single form arising out of the parts, yet different from all the parts? | -350 | 1,997 | 108 | or do you mean by 'the whole' also a single form arising out of the parts, yet different from all the parts? | ['or', 'do', 'you', 'mean', 'by', 'the', 'whole', 'also', 'single', 'form', 'arising', 'out', 'of', 'the', 'parts', 'yet', 'different', 'from', 'all', 'the', 'parts'] | or do -PRON- mean by ' the whole ' also a single form arise out of the part , yet different from all the part ? |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | Now do you call 'sum' and 'whole' the same thing or different things? | Now do you call 'sum' and 'whole' the same thing or different things? | -350 | 1,997 | 69 | now do you call 'sum' and 'whole' the same thing or different things? | ['now', 'do', 'you', 'call', 'sum', 'and', 'whole', 'the', 'same', 'thing', 'or', 'different', 'things'] | now do -PRON- call ' sum ' and ' whole ' the same thing or different thing ? |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | I don't feel at all certain; but | I don't feel at all certain; but | -350 | 1,997 | 32 | i don't feel at all certain; but | ['don', 'feel', 'at', 'all', 'certain', 'but'] | -PRON- do not feel at all certain ; but |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | as you keep telling me to answer up with a good will, I will take a risk and say they are different. | as you keep telling me to answer up with a good will, I will take a risk and say they are different. | -350 | 1,997 | 100 | as you keep telling me to answer up with a good will, i will take a risk and say they are different. | ['as', 'you', 'keep', 'telling', 'me', 'to', 'answer', 'up', 'with', 'good', 'will', 'will', 'take', 'risk', 'and', 'say', 'they', 'are', 'different'] | as -PRON- keep tell -PRON- to answer up with a good will , -PRON- will take a risk and say -PRON- be different . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | Your good will, Theaetetus, is all that it should be. | Your good will, Theaetetus, is all that it should be. | -350 | 1,997 | 53 | your good will, theaetetus, is all that it should be. | ['your', 'good', 'will', 'theaetetus', 'is', 'all', 'that', 'it', 'should', 'be'] | -PRON- good will , Theaetetus , be all that -PRON- should be . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | Now we must see if your answer is too. | Now we must see if your answer is too. | -350 | 1,997 | 38 | now we must see if your answer is too. | ['now', 'we', 'must', 'see', 'if', 'your', 'answer', 'is', 'too'] | now -PRON- must see if -PRON- answer be too . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | As the argument stands at present, the whole will be different from the sum? | As the argument stands at present, the whole will be different from the sum? | -350 | 1,997 | 76 | as the argument stands at present, the whole will be different from the sum? | ['as', 'the', 'argument', 'stands', 'at', 'present', 'the', 'whole', 'will', 'be', 'different', 'from', 'the', 'sum'] | as the argument stand at present , the whole will be different from the sum ? |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | Well now, is there any difference between all the things and the sum? | Well now, is there any difference between all the things and the sum? | -350 | 1,997 | 69 | well now, is there any difference between all the things and the sum? | ['well', 'now', 'is', 'there', 'any', 'difference', 'between', 'all', 'the', 'things', 'and', 'the', 'sum'] | well now , be there any difference between all the thing and the sum ? |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | For instance, when we say 'one, two, three, four, five, six'; or, 'twice three', or 'three times two', 'four and two', 'three and two and one'; are we speaking of the same thing in all these cases or different things? | For instance, when we say 'one, two, three, four, five, six'; or, 'twice three', or 'three times two', 'four and two', 'three and two and one'; are we speaking of the same thing in all these cases or different things? | -350 | 1,997 | 217 | for instance, when we say 'one, two, three, four, five, six'; or, 'twice three', or 'three times two', 'four and two', 'three and two and one'; are we speaking of the same thing in all these cases or different things? | ['for', 'instance', 'when', 'we', 'say', 'one', 'two', 'three', 'four', 'five', 'six', 'or', 'twice', 'three', 'or', 'three', 'times', 'two', 'four', 'and', 'two', 'three', 'and', 'two', 'and', 'one', 'are', 'we', 'speaking', 'of', 'the', 'same', 'thing', 'in', 'all', 'these', 'cases', 'or', 'different', 'things'] | for instance , when -PRON- say ' one , two , three , four , five , six ' ; or , ' twice three ' , or ' three time two ' , ' four and two ' , ' three and two and one ' ; be -PRON- speak of the same thing in all these case or different thing ? |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | Then with each expression have we not spoken of all the six? | Then with each expression have we not spoken of all the six? | -350 | 1,997 | 60 | then with each expression have we not spoken of all the six? | ['then', 'with', 'each', 'expression', 'have', 'we', 'not', 'spoken', 'of', 'all', 'the', 'six'] | then with each expression have -PRON- not speak of all the six ? |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | And when we speak of them all, aren't we speaking of a sum? | And when we speak of them all, aren't we speaking of a sum? | -350 | 1,997 | 59 | and when we speak of them all, aren't we speaking of a sum? | ['and', 'when', 'we', 'speak', 'of', 'them', 'all', 'aren', 'we', 'speaking', 'of', 'sum'] | and when -PRON- speak of -PRON- all , be not -PRON- speak of a sum ? |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | Then in all things made up of number, at any rate, by 'the sum' and 'all of them' we mean the same thing? | Then in all things made up of number, at any rate, by 'the sum' and 'all of them' we mean the same thing? | -350 | 1,997 | 105 | then in all things made up of number, at any rate, by 'the sum' and 'all of them' we mean the same thing? | ['then', 'in', 'all', 'things', 'made', 'up', 'of', 'number', 'at', 'any', 'rate', 'by', 'the', 'sum', 'and', 'all', 'of', 'them', 'we', 'mean', 'the', 'same', 'thing'] | then in all thing make up of number , at any rate , by ' the sum ' and ' all of -PRON- ' -PRON- mean the same thing ? |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | Now let us talk about them in this way. | Now let us talk about them in this way. | -350 | 1,997 | 39 | now let us talk about them in this way. | ['now', 'let', 'us', 'talk', 'about', 'them', 'in', 'this', 'way'] | now let -PRON- talk about -PRON- in this way . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | The number of an acre is the same thing as an acre, isn't it? | The number of an acre is the same thing as an acre, isn't it? | -350 | 1,997 | 61 | the number of an acre is the same thing as an acre, isn't it? | ['the', 'number', 'of', 'an', 'acre', 'is', 'the', 'same', 'thing', 'as', 'an', 'acre', 'isn', 'it'] | the number of an acre be the same thing as an acre , be not -PRON- ? |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | Similarly with a mile. | Similarly with a mile. | -350 | 1,997 | 22 | similarly with a mile. | ['similarly', 'with', 'mile'] | similarly with a mile . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | The word translated 'sum' (pan) and the word translated 'all' (panta) in the phrase 'all the parts' are singular and plural forms of the same Greek word. | The word translated 'sum' (pan) and the word translated 'all' (panta) in the phrase 'all the parts' are singular and plural forms of the same Greek word. | -350 | 1,997 | 153 | the word translated 'sum' (pan) and the word translated 'all' (panta) in the phrase 'all the parts' are singular and plural forms of the same greek word. | ['the', 'word', 'translated', 'sum', 'pan', 'and', 'the', 'word', 'translated', 'all', 'panta', 'in', 'the', 'phrase', 'all', 'the', 'parts', 'are', 'singular', 'and', 'plural', 'forms', 'of', 'the', 'same', 'greek', 'word'] | the word translate ' sum ' ( pan ) and the word translate ' all ' ( panta ) in the phrase ' all the part ' be singular and plural form of the same greek word . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | Theaetetus And the number of an army is the same as the army? | Theaetetus And the number of an army is the same as the army? | -350 | 1,997 | 61 | theaetetus and the number of an army is the same as the army? | ['theaetetus', 'and', 'the', 'number', 'of', 'an', 'army', 'is', 'the', 'same', 'as', 'the', 'army'] | Theaetetus and the number of an army be the same as the army ? |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | And so always with things of this sort; their total number is the sum that each of them is. | And so always with things of this sort; their total number is the sum that each of them is. | -350 | 1,997 | 91 | and so always with things of this sort; their total number is the sum that each of them is. | ['and', 'so', 'always', 'with', 'things', 'of', 'this', 'sort', 'their', 'total', 'number', 'is', 'the', 'sum', 'that', 'each', 'of', 'them', 'is'] | and so always with thing of this sort ; -PRON- total number be the sum that each of -PRON- be . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | But is the number of each anything other than its parts? | But is the number of each anything other than its parts? | -350 | 1,997 | 56 | but is the number of each anything other than its parts? | ['but', 'is', 'the', 'number', 'of', 'each', 'anything', 'other', 'than', 'its', 'parts'] | but be the number of each anything other than -PRON- part ? |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | Now things which have parts consist of parts? | Now things which have parts consist of parts? | -350 | 1,997 | 45 | now things which have parts consist of parts? | ['now', 'things', 'which', 'have', 'parts', 'consist', 'of', 'parts'] | now thing which have part consist of part ? |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | And it is agreed that all the parts are the sum, seeing that the total number is to be the sum. | And it is agreed that all the parts are the sum, seeing that the total number is to be the sum. | -350 | 1,997 | 95 | and it is agreed that all the parts are the sum, seeing that the total number is to be the sum. | ['and', 'it', 'is', 'agreed', 'that', 'all', 'the', 'parts', 'are', 'the', 'sum', 'seeing', 'that', 'the', 'total', 'number', 'is', 'to', 'be', 'the', 'sum'] | and -PRON- be agree that all the part be the sum , see that the total number be to be the sum . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | Then the whole does not consist of parts. | Then the whole does not consist of parts. | -350 | 1,997 | 41 | then the whole does not consist of parts. | ['then', 'the', 'whole', 'does', 'not', 'consist', 'of', 'parts'] | then the whole do not consist of part . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | For if it did, it would be all the parts | For if it did, it would be all the parts | -350 | 1,997 | 40 | for if it did, it would be all the parts | ['for', 'if', 'it', 'did', 'it', 'would', 'be', 'all', 'the', 'parts'] | for if -PRON- do , -PRON- would be all the part |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | and so would be a sum. | and so would be a sum. | -350 | 1,997 | 22 | and so would be a sum. | ['and', 'so', 'would', 'be', 'sum'] | and so would be a sum . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | It looks as if it doesn't. | It looks as if it doesn't. | -350 | 1,997 | 26 | it looks as if it doesn't. | ['it', 'looks', 'as', 'if', 'it', 'doesn'] | -PRON- look as if -PRON- do not . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | But can a part, as such, be a part of anything but the whole? | But can a part, as such, be a part of anything but the whole? | -350 | 1,997 | 61 | but can a part, as such, be a part of anything but the whole? | ['but', 'can', 'part', 'as', 'such', 'be', 'part', 'of', 'anything', 'but', 'the', 'whole'] | but can a part , as such , be a part of anything but the whole ? |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | You are putting up a good fight anyway, Theaetetus. | You are putting up a good fight anyway, Theaetetus. | -350 | 1,997 | 51 | you are putting up a good fight anyway, theaetetus. | ['you', 'are', 'putting', 'up', 'good', 'fight', 'anyway', 'theaetetus'] | -PRON- be put up a good fight anyway , Theaetetus . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | But this sum now isn't it just when there is nothing lacking that it is a sum? | But this sum now isn't it just when there is nothing lacking that it is a sum? | -350 | 1,997 | 78 | but this sum now isn't it just when there is nothing lacking that it is a sum? | ['but', 'this', 'sum', 'now', 'isn', 'it', 'just', 'when', 'there', 'is', 'nothing', 'lacking', 'that', 'it', 'is', 'sum'] | but this sum now be not -PRON- just when there be nothing lack that -PRON- be a sum ? |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | And won't this very same thing that from which nothing anywhere is lacking be a whole? | And won't this very same thing that from which nothing anywhere is lacking be a whole? | -350 | 1,997 | 86 | and won't this very same thing that from which nothing anywhere is lacking be a whole? | ['and', 'won', 'this', 'very', 'same', 'thing', 'that', 'from', 'which', 'nothing', 'anywhere', 'is', 'lacking', 'be', 'whole'] | and will not this very same thing that from which nothing anywhere be lack be a whole ? |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | While a thing from which something is absent is neither a whole nor a sum | While a thing from which something is absent is neither a whole nor a sum | -350 | 1,997 | 73 | while a thing from which something is absent is neither a whole nor a sum | ['while', 'thing', 'from', 'which', 'something', 'is', 'absent', 'is', 'neither', 'whole', 'nor', 'sum'] | while a thing from which something be absent be neither a whole nor a sum |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | the same consequence having followed from the same condition in both cases at once? | the same consequence having followed from the same condition in both cases at once? | -350 | 1,997 | 83 | the same consequence having followed from the same condition in both cases at once? | ['the', 'same', 'consequence', 'having', 'followed', 'from', 'the', 'same', 'condition', 'in', 'both', 'cases', 'at', 'once'] | the same consequence have follow from the same condition in both case at once ? |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | Well, it doesn't seem to me now that there can be any difference between whole and sum. | Well, it doesn't seem to me now that there can be any difference between whole and sum. | -350 | 1,997 | 87 | well, it doesn't seem to me now that there can be any difference between whole and sum. | ['well', 'it', 'doesn', 'seem', 'to', 'me', 'now', 'that', 'there', 'can', 'be', 'any', 'difference', 'between', 'whole', 'and', 'sum'] | well , -PRON- do not seem to -PRON- now that there can be any difference between whole and sum . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | Now were we not sayi that in the case of a thing that has parts, both the whole and the sum will be all the parts? | Now were we not sayi that in the case of a thing that has parts, both the whole and the sum will be all the parts? | -350 | 1,997 | 114 | now were we not sayi that in the case of a thing that has parts, both the whole and the sum will be all the parts? | ['now', 'were', 'we', 'not', 'sayi', 'that', 'in', 'the', 'case', 'of', 'thing', 'that', 'has', 'parts', 'both', 'the', 'whole', 'and', 'the', 'sum', 'will', 'be', 'all', 'the', 'parts'] | now be -PRON- not sayi that in the case of a thing that have part , both the whole and the sum will be all the part ? |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | Now come back to the thing I was trying to get at just now. | Now come back to the thing I was trying to get at just now. | -350 | 1,997 | 59 | now come back to the thing i was trying to get at just now. | ['now', 'come', 'back', 'to', 'the', 'thing', 'was', 'trying', 'to', 'get', 'at', 'just', 'now'] | now come back to the thing -PRON- be try to get at just now . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | Supposing the syllable is not just its letters, doesn't it follow that it cannot contain the letters as parts of itself? | Supposing the syllable is not just its letters, doesn't it follow that it cannot contain the letters as parts of itself? | -350 | 1,997 | 120 | supposing the syllable is not just its letters, doesn't it follow that it cannot contain the letters as parts of itself? | ['supposing', 'the', 'syllable', 'is', 'not', 'just', 'its', 'letters', 'doesn', 'it', 'follow', 'that', 'it', 'cannot', 'contain', 'the', 'letters', 'as', 'parts', 'of', 'itself'] | suppose the syllable be not just -PRON- letter , do not -PRON- follow that -PRON- can not contain the letter as part of -PRON- ? |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | Alternatively, if it is the same as the letters, it must be equally knowable with them? | Alternatively, if it is the same as the letters, it must be equally knowable with them? | -350 | 1,997 | 87 | alternatively, if it is the same as the letters, it must be equally knowable with them? | ['alternatively', 'if', 'it', 'is', 'the', 'same', 'as', 'the', 'letters', 'it', 'must', 'be', 'equally', 'knowable', 'with', 'them'] | alternatively , if -PRON- be the same as the letter , -PRON- must be equally knowable with -PRON- ? |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | Well, wasn't it just in order to avoid this result that we supposed it different from the letters? | Well, wasn't it just in order to avoid this result that we supposed it different from the letters? | -350 | 1,997 | 98 | well, wasn't it just in order to avoid this result that we supposed it different from the letters? | ['well', 'wasn', 'it', 'just', 'in', 'order', 'to', 'avoid', 'this', 'result', 'that', 'we', 'supposed', 'it', 'different', 'from', 'the', 'letters'] | well , be not -PRON- just in order to avoid this result that -PRON- suppose -PRON- different from the letter ? |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | Well then, if the letters are not parts of the syllable, can you tell me of any other things, not its letters, which are? | Well then, if the letters are not parts of the syllable, can you tell me of any other things, not its letters, which are? | -350 | 1,997 | 121 | well then, if the letters are not parts of the syllable, can you tell me of any other things, not its letters, which are? | ['well', 'then', 'if', 'the', 'letters', 'are', 'not', 'parts', 'of', 'the', 'syllable', 'can', 'you', 'tell', 'me', 'of', 'any', 'other', 'things', 'not', 'its', 'letters', 'which', 'are'] | well then , if the letter be not part of the syllable , can -PRON- tell -PRON- of any other thing , not -PRON- letter , which be ? |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | If I were to admit that it had component parts, Socrates, it would be ridiculous, of course, to set aside the letters and look for other components. | If I were to admit that it had component parts, Socrates, it would be ridiculous, of course, to set aside the letters and look for other components. | -350 | 1,997 | 148 | if i were to admit that it had component parts, socrates, it would be ridiculous, of course, to set aside the letters and look for other components. | ['if', 'were', 'to', 'admit', 'that', 'it', 'had', 'component', 'parts', 'socrates', 'it', 'would', 'be', 'ridiculous', 'of', 'course', 'to', 'set', 'aside', 'the', 'letters', 'and', 'look', 'for', 'other', 'components'] | if -PRON- be to admit that -PRON- have component part , Socrates , -PRON- would be ridiculous , of course , to set aside the letter and look for other component . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | Then, Theaetetus, according to our present argument, a syllable is an absolutely single form, indivisible into parts. | Then, Theaetetus, according to our present argument, a syllable is an absolutely single form, indivisible into parts. | -350 | 1,997 | 117 | then, theaetetus, according to our present argument, a syllable is an absolutely single form, indivisible into parts. | ['then', 'theaetetus', 'according', 'to', 'our', 'present', 'argument', 'syllable', 'is', 'an', 'absolutely', 'single', 'form', 'indivisible', 'into', 'parts'] | then , Theaetetus , accord to -PRON- present argument , a syllable be an absolutely single form , indivisible into part . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | Now, my friend, a little while ago, if you remember, we were inclined to accept a certain proposition which we thought put the matter very well | Now, my friend, a little while ago, if you remember, we were inclined to accept a certain proposition which we thought put the matter very well | -350 | 1,997 | 143 | now, my friend, a little while ago, if you remember, we were inclined to accept a certain proposition which we thought put the matter very well | ['now', 'my', 'friend', 'little', 'while', 'ago', 'if', 'you', 'remember', 'we', 'were', 'inclined', 'to', 'accept', 'certain', 'proposition', 'which', 'we', 'thought', 'put', 'the', 'matter', 'very', 'well'] | now , -PRON- friend , a little while ago , if -PRON- remember , -PRON- be inclined to accept a certain proposition which -PRON- think put the matter very well |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | I mean the statement that no account can be given of the primaries of which other things are constituted, because each of them is in itself incomposite; and that it would be incorrect to apply even the term 'being' to it when we spoke of it or the term 'this', because these terms signify different and alien things; and that is the reason why a primary is an unaccountable and unknowable thing. | I mean the statement that no account can be given of the primaries of which other things are constituted, because each of them is in itself incomposite; and that it would be incorrect to apply even the term 'being' to it when we spoke of it or the term 'this', because these terms signify different and alien things; and that is the reason why a primary is an unaccountable and unknowable thing. | -350 | 1,997 | 395 | i mean the statement that no account can be given of the primaries of which other things are constituted, because each of them is in itself incomposite; and that it would be incorrect to apply even the term 'being' to it when we spoke of it or the term 'this', because these terms signify different and alien things; and that is the reason why a primary is an unaccountable and unknowable thing. | ['mean', 'the', 'statement', 'that', 'no', 'account', 'can', 'be', 'given', 'of', 'the', 'primaries', 'of', 'which', 'other', 'things', 'are', 'constituted', 'because', 'each', 'of', 'them', 'is', 'in', 'itself', 'incomposite', 'and', 'that', 'it', 'would', 'be', 'incorrect', 'to', 'apply', 'even', 'the', 'term', 'being', 'to', 'it', 'when', 'we', 'spoke', 'of', 'it', 'or', 'the', 'term', 'this', 'because', 'these', 'terms', 'signify', 'different', 'and', 'alien', 'things', 'and', 'that', 'is', 'the', 'reason', 'why', 'primary', 'is', 'an', 'unaccountable', 'and', 'unknowable', 'thing'] | -PRON- mean the statement that no account can be give of the primary of which other thing be constitute , because each of -PRON- be in -PRON- incomposite ; and that -PRON- would be incorrect to apply even the term ' be ' to -PRON- when -PRON- speak of -PRON- or the term ' this ' , because these term signify different and alien thing ; and that be the reason why a primary be an unaccountable and unknowable thing . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | And is that the reason also why it is single in form and indivisible into parts or is there some other reason for that? | And is that the reason also why it is single in form and indivisible into parts or is there some other reason for that? | -350 | 1,997 | 119 | and is that the reason also why it is single in form and indivisible into parts or is there some other reason for that? | ['and', 'is', 'that', 'the', 'reason', 'also', 'why', 'it', 'is', 'single', 'in', 'form', 'and', 'indivisible', 'into', 'parts', 'or', 'is', 'there', 'some', 'other', 'reason', 'for', 'that'] | and be that the reason also why -PRON- be single in form and indivisible into part or be there some other reason for that ? |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | I can see no other myself. | I can see no other myself. | -350 | 1,997 | 26 | i can see no other myself. | ['can', 'see', 'no', 'other', 'myself'] | -PRON- can see no other -PRON- . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | No, there really doesn't seem to be any other. | No, there really doesn't seem to be any other. | -350 | 1,997 | 46 | no, there really doesn't seem to be any other. | ['no', 'there', 'really', 'doesn', 'seem', 'to', 'be', 'any', 'other'] | no , there really do not seem to be any other . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | And hasn't the complex now fallen into the same class as the primary, seeing it has no parts and is a single form? | And hasn't the complex now fallen into the same class as the primary, seeing it has no parts and is a single form? | -350 | 1,997 | 114 | and hasn't the complex now fallen into the same class as the primary, seeing it has no parts and is a single form? | ['and', 'hasn', 'the', 'complex', 'now', 'fallen', 'into', 'the', 'same', 'class', 'as', 'the', 'primary', 'seeing', 'it', 'has', 'no', 'parts', 'and', 'is', 'single', 'form'] | and have not the complex now fall into the same class as the primary , see -PRON- have no part and be a single form ? |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | Yes, it certainly has. | Yes, it certainly has. | -350 | 1,997 | 22 | yes, it certainly has. | ['yes', 'it', 'certainly', 'has'] | yes , -PRON- certainly have . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | Well now, if the complex is both many elements and a whole, with them as its parts, then both complexes and elements are equally capable of being known and expressed, since all the parts turned out to be the same thing as the whole. | Well now, if the complex is both many elements and a whole, with them as its parts, then both complexes and elements are equally capable of being known and expressed, since all the parts turned out to be the same thing as the whole. | -350 | 1,997 | 232 | well now, if the complex is both many elements and a whole, with them as its parts, then both complexes and elements are equally capable of being known and expressed, since all the parts turned out to be the same thing as the whole. | ['well', 'now', 'if', 'the', 'complex', 'is', 'both', 'many', 'elements', 'and', 'whole', 'with', 'them', 'as', 'its', 'parts', 'then', 'both', 'complexes', 'and', 'elements', 'are', 'equally', 'capable', 'of', 'being', 'known', 'and', 'expressed', 'since', 'all', 'the', 'parts', 'turned', 'out', 'to', 'be', 'the', 'same', 'thing', 'as', 'the', 'whole'] | well now , if the complex be both many element and a whole , with -PRON- as -PRON- part , then both complex and element be equally capable of be know and express , since all the part turn out to be the same thing as the whole . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | But if, on the other hand, the complex is single and without parts, then complexes and elements are equally unaccountable and unknowable both of them for the same reason. | But if, on the other hand, the complex is single and without parts, then complexes and elements are equally unaccountable and unknowable both of them for the same reason. | -350 | 1,997 | 170 | but if, on the other hand, the complex is single and without parts, then complexes and elements are equally unaccountable and unknowable both of them for the same reason. | ['but', 'if', 'on', 'the', 'other', 'hand', 'the', 'complex', 'is', 'single', 'and', 'without', 'parts', 'then', 'complexes', 'and', 'elements', 'are', 'equally', 'unaccountable', 'and', 'unknowable', 'both', 'of', 'them', 'for', 'the', 'same', 'reason'] | but if , on the other hand , the complex be single and without part , then complex and element be equally unaccountable and unknowable both of -PRON- for the same reason . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | I can't dispute that. | I can't dispute that. | -350 | 1,997 | 21 | i can't dispute that. | ['can', 'dispute', 'that'] | -PRON- can not dispute that . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | Then if anyone tries to tell us that the complex can be known and expressed, while the contrary is true of the element, we had better not listen to him. | Then if anyone tries to tell us that the complex can be known and expressed, while the contrary is true of the element, we had better not listen to him. | -350 | 1,997 | 152 | then if anyone tries to tell us that the complex can be known and expressed, while the contrary is true of the element, we had better not listen to him. | ['then', 'if', 'anyone', 'tries', 'to', 'tell', 'us', 'that', 'the', 'complex', 'can', 'be', 'known', 'and', 'expressed', 'while', 'the', 'contrary', 'is', 'true', 'of', 'the', 'element', 'we', 'had', 'better', 'not', 'listen', 'to', 'him'] | then if anyone try to tell -PRON- that the complex can be know and express , while the contrary be true of the element , -PRON- have well not listen to -PRON- . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | No, we'd better not, if we go along with the argument. | No, we'd better not, if we go along with the argument. | -350 | 1,997 | 54 | no, we'd better not, if we go along with the argument. | ['no', 'we', 'better', 'not', 'if', 'we', 'go', 'along', 'with', 'the', 'argument'] | no , -PRON- would better not , if -PRON- go along with the argument . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | And, more than this, wouldn't you more easily believe somebody who made the contrary statement, because of what you know of your own experience in learning to read and write? | And, more than this, wouldn't you more easily believe somebody who made the contrary statement, because of what you know of your own experience in learning to read and write? | -350 | 1,997 | 174 | and, more than this, wouldn't you more easily believe somebody who made the contrary statement, because of what you know of your own experience in learning to read and write? | ['and', 'more', 'than', 'this', 'wouldn', 'you', 'more', 'easily', 'believe', 'somebody', 'who', 'made', 'the', 'contrary', 'statement', 'because', 'of', 'what', 'you', 'know', 'of', 'your', 'own', 'experience', 'in', 'learning', 'to', 'read', 'and', 'write'] | and , more than this , would not -PRON- more easily believe somebody who make the contrary statement , because of what -PRON- know of -PRON- own experience in learn to read and write ? |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | I mean that when you were learning you spent your time just precisely in trying to distinguish, by both eye and ear, each individual letter in itself so that you might not be bewildered by their different positions in written and spoken words. | I mean that when you were learning you spent your time just precisely in trying to distinguish, by both eye and ear, each individual letter in itself so that you might not be bewildered by their different positions in written and spoken words. | -350 | 1,997 | 243 | i mean that when you were learning you spent your time just precisely in trying to distinguish, by both eye and ear, each individual letter in itself so that you might not be bewildered by their different positions in written and spoken words. | ['mean', 'that', 'when', 'you', 'were', 'learning', 'you', 'spent', 'your', 'time', 'just', 'precisely', 'in', 'trying', 'to', 'distinguish', 'by', 'both', 'eye', 'and', 'ear', 'each', 'individual', 'letter', 'in', 'itself', 'so', 'that', 'you', 'might', 'not', 'be', 'bewildered', 'by', 'their', 'different', 'positions', 'in', 'written', 'and', 'spoken', 'words'] | -PRON- mean that when -PRON- be learn -PRON- spend -PRON- time just precisely in try to distinguish , by both eye and ear , each individual letter in -PRON- so that -PRON- may not be bewilder by -PRON- different position in write and speak word . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | Alternatively (accepting the conjecture of to for touto at d): 'And is there any other reason for this than that it is single in form and indivisible into parts?' | Alternatively (accepting the conjecture of to for touto at d): 'And is there any other reason for this than that it is single in form and indivisible into parts?' | -350 | 1,997 | 162 | alternatively (accepting the conjecture of to for touto at d): 'and is there any other reason for this than that it is single in form and indivisible into parts?' | ['alternatively', 'accepting', 'the', 'conjecture', 'of', 'to', 'for', 'touto', 'at', 'and', 'is', 'there', 'any', 'other', 'reason', 'for', 'this', 'than', 'that', 'it', 'is', 'single', 'in', 'form', 'and', 'indivisible', 'into', 'parts'] | alternatively ( accept the conjecture of to for touto at d ) : ' and be there any other reason for this than that -PRON- be single in form and indivisible into part ? ' |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | And at the music teacher's, wasn't the finished pupil the one who would follow each note and tell to which string it belonged the notes being generally admitted to be the elements in music? | And at the music teacher's, wasn't the finished pupil the one who would follow each note and tell to which string it belonged the notes being generally admitted to be the elements in music? | -350 | 1,997 | 189 | and at the music teacher's, wasn't the finished pupil the one who would follow each note and tell to which string it belonged the notes being generally admitted to be the elements in music? | ['and', 'at', 'the', 'music', 'teacher', 'wasn', 'the', 'finished', 'pupil', 'the', 'one', 'who', 'would', 'follow', 'each', 'note', 'and', 'tell', 'to', 'which', 'string', 'it', 'belonged', 'the', 'notes', 'being', 'generally', 'admitted', 'to', 'be', 'the', 'elements', 'in', 'music'] | and at the music teacher 's , be not the finished pupil the one who would follow each note and tell to which string -PRON- belong the note be generally admit to be the element in music ? |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | Yes, that's just what it amounted to. | Yes, that's just what it amounted to. | -350 | 1,997 | 37 | yes, that's just what it amounted to. | ['yes', 'that', 'just', 'what', 'it', 'amounted', 'to'] | yes , that be just what -PRON- amount to . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | Then if the proper procedure is to take such elements and complexes as we ourselves have experience of, and make an inference from them to the rest, we shall say that the elements are much more clearly known, and the knowledge of them is more decisive for the mastery of any branch of study than knowledge of the complex. | Then if the proper procedure is to take such elements and complexes as we ourselves have experience of, and make an inference from them to the rest, we shall say that the elements are much more clearly known, and the knowledge of them is more decisive for the mastery of any branch of study than knowledge of the complex. | -350 | 1,997 | 321 | then if the proper procedure is to take such elements and complexes as we ourselves have experience of, and make an inference from them to the rest, we shall say that the elements are much more clearly known, and the knowledge of them is more decisive for the mastery of any branch of study than knowledge of the complex. | ['then', 'if', 'the', 'proper', 'procedure', 'is', 'to', 'take', 'such', 'elements', 'and', 'complexes', 'as', 'we', 'ourselves', 'have', 'experience', 'of', 'and', 'make', 'an', 'inference', 'from', 'them', 'to', 'the', 'rest', 'we', 'shall', 'say', 'that', 'the', 'elements', 'are', 'much', 'more', 'clearly', 'known', 'and', 'the', 'knowledge', 'of', 'them', 'is', 'more', 'decisive', 'for', 'the', 'mastery', 'of', 'any', 'branch', 'of', 'study', 'than', 'knowledge', 'of', 'the', 'complex'] | then if the proper procedure be to take such element and complex as -PRON- -PRON- have experience of , and make an inference from -PRON- to the rest , -PRON- shall say that the element be much more clearly know , and the knowledge of -PRON- be more decisive for the mastery of any branch of study than knowledge of the complex . |
Plato - Complete Works | Plato | plato | And if anyone maintains that the complex is by nature knowable, and the element unknowable, we shall regard this as tomfoolery, whether it is intended to be or not. | And if anyone maintains that the complex is by nature knowable, and the element unknowable, we shall regard this as tomfoolery, whether it is intended to be or not. | -350 | 1,997 | 164 | and if anyone maintains that the complex is by nature knowable, and the element unknowable, we shall regard this as tomfoolery, whether it is intended to be or not. | ['and', 'if', 'anyone', 'maintains', 'that', 'the', 'complex', 'is', 'by', 'nature', 'knowable', 'and', 'the', 'element', 'unknowable', 'we', 'shall', 'regard', 'this', 'as', 'tomfoolery', 'whether', 'it', 'is', 'intended', 'to', 'be', 'or', 'not'] | and if anyone maintain that the complex be by nature knowable , and the element unknowable , -PRON- shall regard this as tomfoolery , whether -PRON- be intend to be or not . |
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